Nadal, Sharapova reach Italian Open final

Nadal, Sharapova reach Italian Open final
Updated 20 May 2012
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Nadal, Sharapova reach Italian Open final

Nadal, Sharapova reach Italian Open final

ROME: Five-time champion Rafael Nadal struggled with his backhand but overcame a difficult first set to beat fellow Spaniard David Ferrer 7-6 (6), 6-0 yesterday to reach the Italian Open final.
Nadal's opponent today will be the winner of the match between his two main rivals — top-ranked Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer.
In women's play, Maria Sharapova defeated rising German player Angelique Kerber 6-3, 6-4. The Russian will defend her title against the French Open champion Li Na. The Chinese player advanced after Serena Williams withdrew shortly before their semifinal with a lower back injury.
Williams said the back problem affected her game earlier this week. But said she will be ready for the French Open which starts in a week.
“It was feeling a little stiff and I don't think this is the right moment to force (it),” she said. “I just want to relax and get ready for the next few months.
This is a good week to get better and I'm confident that I'll be 100 percent.”
With Ferrer picking on his backhand and winning most of the long rallies early on, Nadal needed to save seven break points to hold his opening service game.
The first set was decided by just two key points. Early on in the tiebreaker, Ferrer was up a mini-break and in control of a point when he attempted a drop shot that landed in the net. Nadal regrouped and took control when he ran down a difficult half volley from Ferrer.
Of Nadal's 20 unforced errors in the first, 15 were backhands. It was his 11th consecutive win on clay against Ferrer.
Sharapova controlled the match with aggressive baseline play, leading 27-9 in winners while committing one fewer unforced error than the 12th-seeded Kerber.
“It feels good coming back to the place where you have accomplished so much and to be in the position to regain that position,” Sharapova said. “I'm happy how I've progressed.”
Sharapova has won three of her last five titles on clay, beating top-ranked Victoria Azarenka in the Stuttgart final last month to add to her titles in Rome last year and Strasbourg the year before. The French Open remains the only Grand Slam the Russian has yet to win.
“The most important thing is physically feeling stronger on the court and handling longer rallies and I recover better,” Sharapova said of her clay-court game. “I have improved a lot in that department.”
At 24, and just a year younger than Sharapova, Kerber won her first career title at the Paris Indoors this year and then took another title in Copenhagen. The German player will break into the top 10 for the first time in her career when WTA rankings are released Monday.
The final will be the fifth for Sharapova this year. She won Stuttgart and finished runner-up at the Australian Open, Indian Wells and Miami.
It will be Li Na's second final of 2012 after losing the Sydney championship to Victoria Azarenka.
Li Na beat Sharapova in the semifinals at last year's French Open. Sharapova won their last meeting in Miami in March.
Williams has a 17-match winning streak. She had won consecutive titles in Charleston, South Carolina, and Madrid. She also won two matches in Fed Cup.
Williams will move up one spot to No. 5 in the rankings Monday.
Several other players are also nursing injuries. Azarenka withdrew with a right shoulder injury before her third-round match. Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova was bothered by an abdominal injury during a quarterfinal loss to Kerber. And Italy's Flavia Pennetta retired with a right wrist injury while trailing Williams 4-0 in the first set Friday.
On the men's side, fourth-ranked Andy Murray skipped last week's Madrid Open with a back problem and said it was still affecting him after a three-set loss to Richard Gasquet in the third round this week.